Doylestown Case Study

Background: Better ICU Staffing Saves Patients’ Lives

Each year, more than 200,000 patients die in Intensive Care Units (ICUs) in the United States. When stakes are high, the quality of care delivered to patients in the ICU is critical. To improve this quality of care, hospitals can staff their ICUs with intensivists, specialists board certified in critical care medicine. They learn to manage problems in the ICU and help to reduce errors. There are higher death rates in hospitals where ICU patients are not cared for by intensivists.

Leapfrog evaluates adult and pediatric general medical and/or surgical ICUs and neuro ICUs in hospitals across the country through the Leapfrog Hospital Survey. This section of the Survey is one of Leapfrog’s original quality and safety standards. All critical care patients in the ICU must be managed or co-managed by physicians who are board-certified in critical care medicine. Those intensivists must be present in the ICU at least 8 hours a day, 7 days a week either through on-site coverage or a combination of on-site and tele-ICU coverage. Intensivists must also respond to texts/calls/pages within 5 minutes at least 95 percent of the time, and be able to rely on another physician to reach the patient within 5 minutes at least 95 percent of the time when they are not in the unit.

Research indicates hospitals that staff ICUs with doctors specializing in critical care medicine can reduce ICU mortality by as much as 40 percent. Additionally, advanced ICU staffing can reduce overall hospital and ICU length of stay. By implementing the Leapfrog ICU staffing standard, hospitals can greatly improve their quality of care and patient safety in the ICU.

Research suggests increasing ICU physician staffing can greatly improve patient care and provide the following benefits:

Reduced cost

Fewer procedural complications

Fewer adverse events

Decreased ventilator days/hospital days

Decreased infection rate

Improved morbidity and mortality rates

Better patient and staff satisfaction

One Hospital’s Journey to Improving Its ICU Staffing

To expand intensivist coverage, Doylestown Hospital, in Doylestown, Pennsylvania, consulted with its doctors to determine the best way to implement the Leapfrog standard. Together, they decided to augment the current practice by adding in-house critical care physicians to serve as full-time intensivists in order to meet staffing requirements. Doylestown Hospital also consulted its board, established a budget and approached donors to manage the financial challenges the hospital faced in light of these efforts.

Two years since implementing new processes to fully meet Leapfrog’s ICU standard, Doylestown Hospital is extremely pleased with the results it has seen in its ICU unit, including a decrease in mortality rate and in length of stay. Expanding staffing coverage has enabled multi-disciplinary rounds on every patient in the ICU. This not only allows the entire health care team to discuss a patient’s case, but also ensures a physician is available to answer questions and assist patients and their loved ones at all times, greatly benefiting both Doylestown’s staff and patients.

“These were incredibly powerful changes to the processes we had in the ICU, and if they were the only outcomes we saw from introducing the program, I would’ve declared it a victory,” says Doylestown Hospital President and CEO Jim Brexler. “Of course, on top of all this, we have also seen better clinical outcomes, so this program has been extremely worthwhile on multiple levels.”

Doylestown began implementing their ICU staffing standard in July 2016, the start of their fiscal year 2017. The table below shows ICU metrics at Doylestown Hospital from fiscal year 2014 through the first half of fiscal year 2018.

Doylestown Hospital ICU Metrics

*Average length of stay

**Data for FY 2014 and 2018 in this table is for a six-month period

The Leapfrog Hospital Survey

In 2017, almost 2,000 hospitals submitted a Leapfrog Hospital Survey, a national non-profit initiative conducted on behalf of hundreds of employers and other purchasers of health care across the country. Purchasers and national health plans request that all general acute care and pediatric hospitals in the U.S. complete the annual survey, and reports those that opt out as “declined to respond.” Results compare quality and safety, reported by hospital, and are used for public reporting and payment strategy. Reporting to the survey is free for all hospitals and the results are available to the public.

Our commentary appears in:

About The Leapfrog Group

The Leapfrog Group is a nonprofit watchdog organization that serves as a voice for health care purchasers, using their collective influence to foster positive change in U.S. health care. Leapfrog is the nation’s premier advocate of hospital transparency—collecting, analyzing and disseminating hospital data to inform value-based purchasing.

By viewing this website you are agreeing to our TERMS OF USE. The information viewed on this site is not intended to be the only or primary means for evaluating hospital quality nor is it intended to be relied upon as advice or a recommendation or an endorsement about which hospitals to use or the quality of the medical treatment that a patient will receive from a hospital or other health care provider. Individuals are solely responsible for any and all decisions with respect to their medical treatment. Neither Leapfrog nor its affiliates are responsible for any damages or costs that may be incurred with respect to use of this site. Never disregard, avoid or delay in obtaining medical advice from a doctor or other health care professional because of material on this site, as the site is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice.